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ARTICLE |

DERMATITIS VENENATA DUE TO A PROPRIETARY HAIR-DYE

ALFRED SCHALEK, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(7):557. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420330039003c.
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ABSTRACT

I was called to see Mrs. E. W., November 4. For a week she had been treated for supposed erysipelas of the face, without benefit. The patient had a rapid pulse but normal temperature, the scalp and the face were much inflamed, of a dusky red, edematous, with a few scattered bullæ. The eyelids were swollen and closed, the eyes injected, smarting and extremely sensitive to light. The patient complained of a burning sensation (but no pain) and of general restlessness which had prevented her from sleeping during the last three nights. Applications of mud poultices and some other dark, sticky, ill-smelling "patent medicines" had succeeded in matting her hair into a felt-like mass and in making her decidedly worse. I diagnosed the case as dermatitis venenata, but was unable to discover the cause at that time. Under appropriate treatment the patient recovered quickly and on November 11, I discharged

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